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Your Advocate
This
week your advocate is M. Moazzam Husain of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh.
His professional interests include civil law, criminal law and constitutional
law. Send your queries to the Law Desk, The Daily Star. A panel of lawyers
will address your problems.
Q:
My father was a Bangladesh railway employee. He purchased a house at H/9,
Block-E, Zakir Hossain Road, Mohammadpur, Dhaka on 22.09. 1961, vide registered
deed 9775, in my mothers name. Since then we had been living there peacefully.
During the was of liberation, moved to our present address for the sake
of our lives keeping the house under lock. After the end of was, we found
our house occupied by some persons. My father tried hard to get back possession
of the house through proper channel, but failed. In the meantime, the
government constituted court of settlement for releasing the properties
declared as abandoned properties to their original owners, who are Bangladeshi
national. Accordingly we filed our case before the said court of settlement.
The court found our claim to be genuine and allowed the case in our favour
by its judgement and order dated 8.1.1994 and ordered for exclusion of
our house from the list of abandoned properties and to hand over possession
of the house to us. The government being aggrieved by the judgement, filed
a writ petition before the High Court. The High Court vide judgement dated
4.8.1998 of writ petition no. 1749 of 1994 upheld judgement of the court
of settlement. The government again filed leave petition before the Appellate
Division against the High Court's judgement. The Appellate Division dismissed
the government's petition. In the meantime the persons who occupied our
house sensing the judgement of the Appellate Division in favour of us,
filed a miscellaneous case and title suit against us before the Court
of Sub Judge, Dhaka. In this circumstances, please advice us what step
should we take to get back our house peacefully.
Zheda Sultana,
28/1, Nabin Chandra Goswami Road,
Faridabad, Dhaka.
Your Advocate
: You have very nicely articulated your grievances. Thank you
for your eloquent expressions in appropriate legal phraseologies. Your
case is very unfortunate and lingering sense of deprivation has seemingly
carried you beyond the bounds of legal technicality and to seek redress
in the pages of news paper. I wish it would not have happened.
I have gone through your problem. You are lucky in the sense that you
have won the battle against the Government up to the Supreme Court on
the question whether the house should be treated as abandoned property
or not. Now just before your turn to reap the harvest the actual occupier
of the house has filed a title suit and , as you say, a miscellaneous
case against you in respect of the property got by you after such a long
battle of attrition. In view of the present position of law and procedure
in our country I find it really difficult to show you a short-cut. Court
of settlement can not determine the question of title of the parties.
Its jurisdiction is circumscribed by law to be confined to the question
of abandonment. Therefore, the occupier has taken the opportunity of law
and designedly filed the title suit so as to continue with the possession
at least as long as the suit continues. You have no other alternative
but to fight through and find means how to end up the ordeal as quickly
as possible.
Yours is a matter sub judice and as such no more comments on it from outside
are warranted. It is not possible either to advice you just on the wording
of your query. Since you have come through prolonged litigation up to
the Supreme Court you must have come across senior and experienced lawyers.
It would be advisable for you to approach any one of them with all your
papers if you have not engaged one by this time. In the peculiar background
of your case I hope victory is yours.
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